Three Modes of Distorted Temporal Experience in Addiction: Daily Life, Drug Ecstasy, and Recovery. A Phenomenological Perspective
Three Modes of Distorted Temporal Experience in Addiction: Daily Life, Drug Ecstasy, and Recovery. A Phenomenological Perspective
Author(s): Marcin MoskalewiczSubject(s): Substance abuse and addiction, Phenomenology
Published by: Instytut Filozofii i Socjologii Polskiej Akademii Nauk
Keywords: lived time; temporal experience; circular time; temporal horizons; sublime;
Summary/Abstract: The article examines distortions of lived time in addiction from a phenomenological perspective and presents their three ideal-typical qualities concerning: (1) daily life, (2) drug ecstasy, and (3) recovery. Regarding the first dimension, the following experiences are being discussed: the highly constricted present, lack of relationship with the future, collapse of being toward possibilities, repetitiveness of behavior and desynchronization with others. Regarding the second dimension, it is argued that drug ecstasy consists in the condensed experience of infinite future possibilities. Regarding the third dimension, the transformation of lived time in recovery is reinterpreted in terms of sublime aesthetic experience in the sense that the paradoxical nature of the sublime exemplifies the phenomenon of double identity of recovering addict in regard to time.
Journal: Archiwum Historii Filozofii i Myśli Społecznej
- Issue Year: 2016
- Issue No: 61supl.
- Page Range: 197-212
- Page Count: 16
- Language: English